1692: The Massacre of Glencoe, in which 34 men, two women and two children, members of the Macdonald clan, were slaughtered by Campbells and other soldiery on government orders after inadvertent failure of clan chief to sign allegiance to William III.

1859: The Corps of Commissionaires was founded in London for the employment of former regular servicemen.

1866: Jesse James robbed his first bank.

1931: Scottish Youth Hostels Association was formed.

1945: Allied forces captured Budapest, Hungary.

1945: 1,400 RAF and 450 United States Air Force bombers devastated Dresden in three waves over a 14-hour period.

1968: Ten thousand US troops were in process of being transported to South Vietnam as fighting increased in that country.

1969: It was announced that eggs removed from a woman volunteer had been fertilised in a test tube as a result of work done at Cambridge University in collaboration with a doctor at Oldham General Hospital.

1974: Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Russian author and Nobel prize-winner in 1970, arrived in Switzerland after being expelled from the Soviet Union.

1990: The two Germanies, with Britain, France, Soviet Union, and US, agreed a framework for German reunification.

1990: Mstislav Rostropovich, Soviet cellist who defected to United States in 1974, played his first concert in USSR for 16 years.

1991: Hundreds died as Americans bombed concrete structure in Baghdad claimed by Allies as command and control centre and by Iraq as air raid shelter.

1992: Ford of Britain announced losses of £920 million, the biggest in its 81-year history.

1994: John Major’s back-to-basics took new battering with resignation of Conservative MP Hartley Booth over relationship with Commons researcher.

2000: The last original “Peanuts” comic strip appeared in newspapers one day after Charles M Schulz died.

2004: The Harvard-Smithsonian Centre for Astrophysics announced the discovery of the universe’s largest known diamond, white dwarf star BPM 37093. Astronomers named this star “Lucy” after The Beatles’ song Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds.

2008: Australian prime minister Kevin Rudd made a historic apology to the Indigenous Australians and the Stolen Generations.

2010: The start of the Winter Olympics were overshadowed by the death of a luge competitor who left the track at high speed. Georgian Nodar Kumaritashvili’s sled flipped and he smashed into a steel pole at the Whistler Sliding Centre, killing the 21-year-old.